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(I have similar post in another forum, sorry to anyone that's read this twice :oops:)

Been recording with Audigy2 Soundblaster card. Everything's been going smoothly until I went to add bass, and no I'm was stuck. Running the bass straight to the soundcard produced a very muddled sound with the low frequencies overwhelming the rest.

Questions:
I recently picked up a studio projects c1 and an m-audio audio buddy to serve as my phantom power supply & preamp. Will running the bass through the audio buddy to the soundcard help at all with the tone and sound? If not, could I do something similar that I'm doing with my guitar i.e. a Behringer bx-108 that has a line out? I think this might help since I'd have more freedom with EQ-ing. Is there any purpose to running the bass through an amp like the bx-108 and the preamp? Should I ever consider Micing the amp if it's something cheap like the bx-108? Anyone have good or bad feedback on the bx-108 or know a good alternative?

THANKS!

Comments

anonymous Tue, 02/14/2006 - 11:24

Well the preamp should definately improve the quality of your sound somewhat, to get some more tone I would recommend a sansamp bass driver di. That should be a huge improvement on tone. Another problem you might run into is headroom. I've use my soundblaster at home when I have song ideas, biggest problem i have is the sound cards small amount of headroom. My solution was to run a compressor set to like 10:1 make sure and get the bass up were the comp is kicking good then slowly bring up the gain until my highest peaks are at -6 or so, but I play real heavy so that might just be my technique issue, but to improve you tone sansamp rocks

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